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    <title>Wicket Examples - component reference</title>
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	<h1>wicket.markup.html.panel.Fragment</h1>
	<wicket:link><a href="Index.html">[back to the reference]</a></wicket:link>

	<p>
	Use fragments for inline panels..<br />

	<span wicket:id="fragment">fragments contents come here</span>
	</p>
    <span wicket:id="explainPanel">panel contents come here</span>

</body>
<wicket:fragment wicket:id="fragmentid">

 	<p style="border: 2px dotted #fc0; padding: 5px;">
 	 A fragment is like a panel, but can be 'inlined',
 	 meaning it does not need it's own markup file, but
 	 can be defined in the markup file of another. For this
 	 example, we use the parent's markup file as the host,
 	 and we do not explicitly tell the fragment which host
 	 to use.<br />
 	 Like panels, fragments can contain arbitrairy components,
 	 like this label: <span wicket:id="label" class="mark">to be replaced</span>, or<br />
 	 even another panel: <span wicket:id="otherPanel"  class="mark">also to be replaced</span>.
 	</p>
 
</wicket:fragment>
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